Evans Bipi insisting he is Speaker |
The statement chronicled the events leading to the purported impeachment claim by 5 members of the House and urged the public to disregard the false claims.
Since the botched impeachment attempt, one Hon. Evans Bipi has rather surreptitiously impersonated the Speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly in Defiance and gross violation of the laws of the Federal Republic of Nigeria and has gone ahead to make publications in the national media. We hereby call on the public to disregard the impostor (Hon. Evans Bapakaye Bipi) and his fabricated fallacies which is targeted at misinforming the general public.
It will be recalled that Evans Bipi and four of his colleagues attempted toppling the leadership of the rivers state house of assembly on the 9th of June 2013, a situation that degenerated to a free for all fight in the hallowed chambers.
However since that botched attempt Honorable Evans Bipi has been parading himself as the speaker of the Rivers State House of Assembly, a situation that is not going down with his colleagues. be sure that Masquerade234 will keep you informed about all aspect of the crisis in Rivers State.
Mobile
phone service returned to the restive city of Maiduguri for the first
time in more than two months on Friday, the latest area of the
conflict-torn northeast to be reconnected.
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
Mobile
phone service returned to the restive city of Maiduguri for the first
time in more than two months on Friday, the latest area of the
conflict-torn northeast to be reconnected.
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
Mobile
phone service returned to the restive city of Maiduguri for the first
time in more than two months on Friday, the latest area of the
conflict-torn northeast to be reconnected.
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
Mobile
phone service returned to the restive city of Maiduguri for the first
time in more than two months on Friday, the latest area of the
conflict-torn northeast to be reconnected.
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
Yobe’s governor said the lack of phone service may have prevented residents from contacting authorities when suspected Boko Haram members raided a secondary school on July 6, killing 42 people, nearly all of them students.
The military has claimed to have pushed out Boko Haram members and destroyed a number of their bases, but the claims have been difficult to verify with the phones cut and access to remote areas restricted.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.Lwnsan4A.dpuf
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
Yobe’s governor said the lack of phone service may have prevented residents from contacting authorities when suspected Boko Haram members raided a secondary school on July 6, killing 42 people, nearly all of them students.
The military has claimed to have pushed out Boko Haram members and destroyed a number of their bases, but the claims have been difficult to verify with the phones cut and access to remote areas restricted.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.Lwnsan4A.dpuf
Mobile
phone service returned to the restive city of Maiduguri for the first
time in more than two months on Friday, the latest area of the
conflict-torn northeast to be reconnected.
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
Mobile
phone service returned to the restive city of Maiduguri for the first
time in more than two months on Friday, the latest area of the
conflict-torn northeast to be reconnected.
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
The military cut mobile phones in the northeast when it launched an offensive on May 15 seeking to end a four-year insurgency by Islamist extremist group Boko Haram.
It also later banned satellite phones, effectively cutting off the region since landline connections are extremely rare in Nigeria.
Last week, the military restored mobile service to Adamawa state and earlier this week began reconnecting Yobe state.
Maiduguri is the capital of Borno, the third state included in a state of emergency declared on May 14 ahead of the military offensive.
A senior military official told an AFP correspondent in Maiduguri that phone service would be restricted to the city for the time being, with other parts of the state still cut off.
Phone service in the city was erratic on Friday, but accessible at times.
“The phone networks will be confined to Maiduguri metropolis at the moment as a security strategy and will be expanded over time depending on the security situation,” the source said on condition of anonymity.
The military has said it cut phone service to prevent Boko Haram from coordinating attacks.
However, a growing number of residents and local officials have called for a return of phone service as the weeks have dragged on.
- See more at: http://www.vanguardngr.com/2013/07/phone-service-returns-to-parts-of-restive-maiduguri/#sthash.dDvil4wk.dpuf
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